Title: Introduction%20To%20Modern%20Astronomy%20II
1Introduction To Modern Astronomy II
ASTR 113 003
Spring 2006 Lecture 11 April 12, 2006
Review (Ch4-5) the Foundation
- Sun, Our star (Ch18)
- Nature of Stars (Ch19)
- Birth of Stars (Ch20)
- After Main Sequence (Ch21)
- Death of Stars (Ch22)
- Neutron Stars (Ch23)
- Black Holes (Ch24)
Star (Ch18-24)
- Our Galaxy (Ch25)
- Galaxies (Ch26)
- Active Galaxies (Ch27)
Galaxy (Ch 25-27)
- Evolution of Universe (Ch28)
- Early Universe (Ch29)
Cosmology (Ch28-29)
Extraterrestrial Life (Ch30)
2Quasars, Active Galaxies,and Gamma-Ray Bursters
ASTR 113 003
Spring 2006 Lecture 11 April 12, 2006
3Guiding Questions
- Why are quasars unusual? How did astronomers
discover that they are extraordinarily distant
and luminous? - What evidence showed a link between quasars and
galaxies? - How are Seyfert galaxies and radio galaxies
related to quasars? - How can material ejected from quasars appear to
travel faster than light? - What could power the incredible energy output
from active galaxies? - Why do many active galaxies emit ultrafast jets
of material? - What are gamma-ray bursters? How did astronomers
discover how far away they are?
4Quasars Discovery
- Quasars, or quasi-stellar radio sources, look
like stars but have huge redshifts. - They were first discovered in radio wavelength
they were strong radio sources in the sky, e.g.,
Cygnus A
5Quasars Distance
- The redshifts (gt0.05 to gt 5) indicate that
quasars are at least several hundred Mpc away,
and often several thousand Mpc away
3C 273 Z0.158 d682 Mpc (or 2 billion ly)
PKS 2000-039 Z3.773 d3810 Mpc (or 12.4 billion
ly)
6Quasars Luminous Objects
- A quasars luminosity can be calculated from its
apparent brightness and the distance using the
inverse-square law - Even though small, the luminosity of a quasar
(1038 to 1042 Watts) can be very larger, i.e.,
several thousand times more than the entire Milly
Way Galaxies (1037). - A quasar has emission spectrum, not the
absorption spectrum of ordinary stars or
galaxies. - We now know that about 10 of all qauasars are
strong sources of radio emission and are
therefore called radio-loud - The remaining 90 are radio-quiet, or
quasi-stellar objects, or QSOs
7Quasars Distribution
- Quasars are most populated in 1 to 4 billion
years after the Big Bang. - There are no nearby quasars (gt250 Mpc)
8Quasars are centers of active galaxies
- A quasar is not a star
- A quasar is the ultra-luminous center of an
active galaxy
9Missing Links
- Quasar are extreme galaxies.
- What are the missing links between normal
galaxies and quasars - Seyfert Galaxies
- Radio Galaxies
10Seyfert galaxies
- Seyfert galaxies are spiral galaxies with bright,
compact nuclei that show intense radiation and
strong emission lines in their spectra. - The nucleus of Seyfert galaxies resembles a
low-luminosity quasar nearby
11Radio galaxies
- Radio galaxies resemble low-luminosity,
radio-loud quasars - Radio galaxies are often elliptical galaxies with
a nucleus of intense activities. Including jets
12Radio Galaxy Centaurus A
- In visible light, it is a elliptic galaxy about
4 Mpc away - In radio wavelength, it shows a central source
and two lobes - In x-ray, it shows a jet
- It looks similar to a quasar in the radio and
X-ray wavelengths
13Jet
- Jets are from the synchrotron radiation of
relativistic particles that are ejected from the
nucleus of a radio galaxy along two oppositely
directed beams - Jets are collimated by the twisted magnetic field
lines along the rotational axis of the central
object
14Synchrotron Radiation
- Synchrotron radiation
- Produced by relativistic electrons spiraling
around magnetic field lines - is non-thermal radiation
- Is polarized radiation
- Blackbody radiation
- Produced by the random thermal motion of the
atoms that make up the emitting object - Is thermal radiation
- Is un-polarized radiation
15Super-luminous Motion of Jets
- Some jets appeared to move faster that the speed
of light, the super-luminous motion - For example, the blob seems moving 10 times
faster than the speed of light
16Super-luminous Motion of Jets
- Super-luminous motion is a projection effect
- Because the blob is moving toward us close to the
speed of light, the signals from the blob always
reach us earlier, which makes any lateral motion
appear faster.
17Blazar
- Similar to quasar, a blazar is an extraordinary
luminous, compact star-like object that is the
core of distant galaxies - But unlike quasar, the spectrum of a blazar is
featureless, without emission line or absorption
line - A blazar is dominated by synchrotron radiation
18AGN Active Galactic Nuclei
- Because the similar properties among quasars,
blazars, Seyfert Galaxies, and radio galaxies,
they are now collectively called active galaxies - Active galaxies possess active galactic nuclei,
which cause intense radiations, fast variations,
jets, lobes, et al.
19AGN Variation and Size
- One common property of all AGN is variability
- Variability place strict limit on the maximum
size of a light source
20AGN Variation and Size
- A principle an object can not vary in brightness
faster than light can travel across the object - E.g., flash from an object 1 ly across reaches us
over I yr period
21Super-massive black holes the central engines
of AGN
- AGN is powered by the accretion of galaxy
material onto a super-massive black hole at the
center - The energy for AGN is the gravitational energy
converted to radiation - Material in an accretion disk spirals inward
toward the black hole
22Super-massive black holes the central engines
of AGN
- The fast orbital motion of stars at the core
indicates the presence of a central object - Calculations show the object to be 3 X 107 solar
mass - Super-black hole exists in the nucleus of almost
every galaxy, including Milky Way
Rotation Curve of Andromeda Galaxy (M31)
23Super-massive black holes the central engines
of AGN
- Estimate the mass of the central black hole for
3C273 - The luminosity is 3 X 1013 Ls
- Assuming the luminosity is at the Eddington limit
- Eddington limit radiation pressure, the pressure
produced by photons streaming outward from the
in-falling material, is equal to the
gravitational force. - The minimum mass of black hole in 3C273 is 109 Ms
- If BH mass were smaller than this number, the
in-falling material would be pushed away from the
radiation pressure
24Jets from a Super-Massive Black hole
- The rotation of the accretion disk surrounding a
super-massive black hole twists the disks
magnetic field lines into a helix. - Relativistic subatomic particles are channeled
along the field lines
25A Unified Theory of Active Galaxies
- Blazars, quasars, and radio galaxies may be the
same type of object, viewed at different angles - The same object is consisted of a super-massive
black hole, its accretion disk and its
relativistic jets
26A Unified Theory of Active Galaxies
- Why there are no nearby quasars
- Because of the strong accretion, over time, most
of the available gas and dust surrounding a
quasars central engine is accreted onto the
black holes the central engine becomes less
active - The collision of galaxies transfer gas and dust
from one galaxy to another, providing more fuel
for the super-massive black
27Gamma-ray Bursters
- Short (in seconds), intense bursts of gamma rays
are observed at random times coming from random
parts of the sky
28Optical Counterparts of Gamma ray Burster
- Tracking the Afterglow, indicating Gamma X-ray
bursters are from distance galaxies - E.g.,optical object z3.418, 12 billion light
years away
29Origins of Gamma Ray Bursters
- Supernova explosion
- Collision between two neutron stars, or between a
neutron star and a black hole, or two black holes
30Key Words
- accretion disk
- active galactic nucleus (AGN)
- active galaxy
- blazar
- collapsar
- double radio source
- Eddington limit
- gamma-ray burster
- head-tail source
- nonthermal radiation
- polarized radiation
- quasar
- radio galaxy
- radio lobes
- Seyfert galaxy
- superluminal motion
- supermassive black hole
- thermal radiation